By Tom Breihan on July 1, 2010 at 10:00 a.m. EDT

Yeasayer: Madder Red (The Golden Filter Remix)

On August 10, Secretly Canadian will release the new Yeasayer single "Madder Red". The digital single includes three tracks: the version of the song that appeared on Odd Blood, an instrumental version, and a remix from New York disco crew the Golden Filter. That remix runs nearly eight minutes and pushes the original track in a few different directions, and you can stream it above.

By Tom Breihan on June 3, 2010 at 6:35 p.m. EDT

Photo by Will Deitz

Brooklyn psych-pop dudes Yeasayer have been touring hard ever since sophomore effort Odd Blood dropped earlier this year. And they'll continue to tour hard in the months ahead. The band has just announced yet another run of U.S. dates this fall, which will follow European and Australian dates. At this point, it makes me tired just to look at their schedule. Hopefully, the members of have found good boarding situations for any pets they may have. Dates below.

By Pitchfork on April 17, 2010 at 2:55 p.m. EDT

Kicking off day one of this year's Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival were Jay-Z, Vampire Weekend, LCD Soundsystem, Grizzly Bear, She & Him, Fever Ray, Yeasayer,Â Gil Scott-Heron, the Specials,Â Them Crooked Vultures, Sleigh Bells, Baroness, and many more.

By Tom Breihan on March 12, 2010 at 5:35 p.m. EST

Photo by Emily Degroot

Previously, wereported that Yeasayer and the Polyphonic Spree will voyage to Gulu, Uganda later in the year to perform live in various locations and learn about the effects of the Ugandan civil war. The trip's being organized by the nonprofit Invisible Children, and it'll become the subject of a documentary film from the French website La Blogotheque, which films bands playing in unexpected locations. More information about the project here.

By Tom Breihan on March 9, 2010 at 1:05 p.m. EST

In Yeasayer's confusing-but-awesome new video for "O.N.E", a guy with a morphing alien face walks into a severely made-up hipster party, where Yeasayer are playing on lit-up instruments and everyone else looks like they're trying out for a Lady Gaga video. He then proceeds to play a game of diamond Tron chess while an audience of futuristic mimes claps politely. None of it makes any sense, but the whole thing still rules hard.

By Amy Phillips on March 1, 2010 at 11:10 a.m. EST

Photo by Sanchez and Kitahara

Yeasayer has committed to join the Polyphonic Spree on a trip to Gulu, Uganda later this year, where the bands will learn about the effects of the Ugandan civil war and perform live in various locations. As previously reported, the trip is being organized by Invisible Children, a nonprofit dedicated to improving the lives of children forced to become soldiers in the civil war. It will be filmed for a documentary by the French site La Blogotheque, known for capturing musicians performing in unlikely settings on programs such as the Take Away Shows.